That's part of what helped lead me away from dualism... Tool helped a lot actually... somewhat sadly.

"We barely remember what came before this precious moment,Choosing to be here right now. Hold on, stay inside...This body holding me, reminding me that I am not alone inThis body makes me feel eternal. All this pain is an illusion" - parabol.I was hoping for things to turn out different than they did. I was seeking to restore some mythical break between my body and my mind. Instead I breached the "gap" by recognizing there wasn't one to begin with, that the "mind" is a physical thing, and thoughts are the result of physical processes.

There are lots of possibilities but I don't know that making things up to fill voids in knowledge is the best way to go. I've also had some interesting debates with people who use "Duotheism" as their base and it all comes back to the same problem... there is no evidence whatsoever one way or the other. It's one thing to admit that we can't possibly know or understand all of the possibilities at this point, but it's entirely another thing to fill in those blanks with more what-ifs.

Coming up with new names for "I don't know" is like throwing gas on a big fire of WTF...

So, my take is... to each their own. People should believe whatever gets them through the day.

There is, however, a lot of evidence against mind/brain dualism. In particular, the changes that can take place in personality if a particular part of the brain is damaged. Memories can be cut out of the brain, personality traits can be cut out of the brain, our ability to reason can be cut out out of the brain - all of which makes it hard to believe that destroying the brain entirely results in complete restoration of the person it once animated.

Well, there is a lot of evidence that debunks most aspects of religion but I was trying to at least play along. Mind/Brain dualism is a little over the top for me. Because the OP posed the question around a deity, I assume this is all about Duotheism.

The qualifications will come in time Vikash, it's the thirst for knowledge that you possess, that can't be taught nor learned - at the risk of sounding like a Dos Equis commercial, stay thirsty, my friend.

I believe all the evidence we have to date overwhelmingly supports the argument that when our brain stops working, we stop thinking - no real evidence for dualism - just another religious fantasy, in my opinion.